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Surface Pro X
Developer Microsoft
Product family Microsoft Surface
Type 2-in-1 detachable
GenerationSeventh
Release dateSQ1: 2 October 2019;
4 years ago
 (2019-10-02)
SQ2: 1 October 2020;
3 years ago
 (2020-10-01)
AvailabilitySQ1: 22 October 2019;
4 years ago
 (2019-10-22)
SQ2: 13 October 2020;
3 years ago
 (2020-10-13)
Introductory priceSQ1": USD 900 to 1,900
SQ2": USD 1,300 to 1,900
Operating system Windows 10
(upgradeable to Windows 11)
CPU Microsoft SQ1 or SQ2
(co-developed with Qualcomm)
Memory8 or 16 GB LPDDR4x RAM
Storage512 GB, 256 GB, 128 GB removable SSD
Removable storagenone
Display13-inch touchscreen
PixelSense display
2880 × 1920, 267 PPI
3:2 aspect ratio, 450 nits
GraphicsSQ1: Adreno 685 GPU
SQ2: Adreno 690 GPU
Sound2W stereo speakers Dolby Audio
InputBuilt in: touchscreen, ambient light sensor, accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer
Sold separately: keyboard, touchpad, mouse, stylus pen, Surface Dial
CameraFront: 5 MP, 1080p HD
Rear: 10 MP, 4K
TouchpadAvailable with Surface Type Cover accessory
Connectivity WiFi 5, Bluetooth 5, USB 3, LTE A, GPS
Online services Microsoft Store, OneDrive
Dimensions287 mm x 208 mm x 7.3 mm
(11.3 in x 8.2 in x 0.28 in)
Mass774 g (1.706 lb) tablet only
Predecessor Surface 2
Successor Surface Pro 9
Website www.surface.com

The Surface Pro X is a 2-in-1 detachable tablet computer developed by Microsoft. It was developed alongside and was announced on 2 October 2019 alongside the Surface Pro 7 and Surface Laptop 3. [1] Updated hardware was announced alongside Surface Laptop Go and Surface accessories on October 1, 2020 [2] and September 22, 2021. [3] The device starts at $899.99 USD / £849.99. [4] [5]

The Surface Pro X comes with a Microsoft SQ1 or SQ2 ARM processor, which the company claimed has three times the performance of an x86 MacBook Air, whilst also having a 13-hour battery life. This is due to the increased power efficiency of ARM processors compared to traditional x86 processors. [1] [6] [7] Microsoft has previously used ARM processors in the discontinued Surface RT and Windows Phone devices.

Microsoft now offers a Wifi-only version of the device as announced at their Surface Event on September 22, 2021. [8]

Configuration

The Surface Pro X starts at US$899.99 / £849.99 for the least expensive model with 8 GB RAM and 128 GB storage.

The device can be bought with either 8 GB or 16 GB RAM. Users can also choose between 128 GB, 256 GB and 512 GB of storage. [9]

Surface Pro X configuration options [10] [11] [12]
Price tier in USD CPU GPU RAM Internal storage LTE Color
Consumer Business
$900 Microsoft SQ1 Adreno 685 8 GB 128 GB No  P 
$1,000 $1,100 Yes  B 
$1,100 256 GB No  P 
$1,300 $1,400 Yes  B 
$1,500 $1,600 16 GB  B 
$1,800 $1,900 512 GB  B 
$1,300 Microsoft SQ2 Adreno 690 256 GB No  P 
$1,500 $1,600 Yes  P   B 
$1,500 512 GB No  P 
$1,800 $1,900 Yes  P   B 

 Platinum   Black 

Hardware and design

The Surface Pro X is the 7th addition to Surface Pro lineup alongside the Surface Pro 7. Microsoft markets the tablet as a "go-anywhere, do-anything PC". [13] Microsoft claims the Surface Pro X's battery can last up to 13 hours of use.

Compared to the Surface Pro 6, the Surface Pro X is slimmer and has rounder edges featuring a matte black finish construction in platinum and black finish. The device contains 2 USB-C ports, an eSIM and a SIM card slot for LTE, a removable SSD, and the Surface Connect port for charging. There are no microSD card slot and headphone jack on the tablet, requiring its users to use dongles and USB-C or Bluetooth enabled headphones. [13]

The device's screen is a 13-inch touchscreen display, with smaller bezels compared to other Surface Pro devices. [14]

The device uses Microsoft SQ1 or SQ2 [15] ARM processors co-developed by Qualcomm, based on the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 1 and Gen 2 processors respectively. A Qualcomm X24 LTE modem is also featured in the device for both processors.

Software

The Surface Pro X comes pre-installed with an ARM-based version of Windows 10, which supports ARM32 and ARM64 UWP and desktop apps from the Microsoft Store or from other sources. x86 applications can be run through emulation, addressing a major issue of Windows RT. [16] [17] [18] Emulation of x64 applications is an upcoming feature that is already available to Windows Insiders for testing. [19] In addition, Hyper-V can be installed on ARM64 devices such as the Surface Pro X running the Pro or Enterprise editions of Windows 10. [20]

Timeline

Timeline of Surface devices
Surface Duo 2 Surface Duo Surface Hub 3 Surface Hub 2S Surface Hub Surface Studio 2 Surface Studio 2 Surface Studio Surface Laptop SE Surface Laptop Studio 2 Surface Laptop Studio Surface Laptop Go 3 Surface Laptop Go 2 Surface Laptop Go Surface Laptop (7th generation) Surface Laptop 6 Surface Laptop 5 Surface Laptop 4 Surface Laptop 3 Surface Laptop 2 Surface Laptop Surface Book 3 Surface Book 2 Surface Book Surface Pro X Surface Pro X Surface Go 4 Surface Go 3 Surface Go 2 Surface Go Surface Pro (11th generation) Surface Pro 10 Surface Pro 9 Surface Pro 8 Surface Pro 7 Surface Pro 7 Surface Pro 6 Surface Pro (2017) Surface Pro 4 Surface Pro 3 Surface Pro 2 Surface Pro Surface 3 Surface 2 Surface (2012 tablet)


References

  1. ^ a b Faulkner, Cameron (2 October 2019). "How to preorder Microsoft's new Surface hardware". The Verge. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  2. ^ "Microsoft's updated Surface Pro X has a faster processor and new platinum color option". The Verge. 1 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Everything announced at Microsoft's Surface hardware event". Windows Central. 22 September 2021. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  4. ^ "Meet the New Surface Pro X – Ultra-thin and Always Connected – Microsoft Surface". Microsoft Store. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  5. ^ "Meet the New Surface Pro X – Ultra-thin and always connected – Microsoft Surface". Microsoft Store. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  6. ^ "ARM Takes Wing: Qualcomm vs. Intel CPU comparison". The Cloudflare Blog. 8 November 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  7. ^ Dubey, Yetnesh (22 April 2019). "CPU Comparison: X86 vs ARM — Will Intel i9 9900K Stay Atop?". Fossbytes. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  8. ^ "The Surface Pro X gets a Wi-Fi-only version". The Verge. 22 September 2021.
  9. ^ "Configure your Surface Pro X". Microsoft Store.
  10. ^ "Configure Surface Pro X". Microsoft Store.
  11. ^ "Configure Surface Pro X for Business". Microsoft Store.
  12. ^ "Configure your Surface Pro X". www.microsoft.com. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
  13. ^ a b Brant, Tom (6 November 2019). "Microsoft Surface Pro X". PC Mag.
  14. ^ Warren, Tom (6 November 2019). "Surface Pro X vs Pro 7: ARM Needs Some Legs". The Verge.
  15. ^ Blog, Microsoft Devices (1 October 2020). "Introducing Surface Laptop Go, new updates to Surface Pro X and new accessories". Microsoft Devices Blog. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  16. ^ hickeys. "Windows 10 on ARM – UWP applications". docs.microsoft.com. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  17. ^ hickeys. "How x86 and ARM32 emulation work on ARM – UWP applications". docs.microsoft.com. Archived from the original on 15 February 2022. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  18. ^ Tracy, Phillip (8 October 2019). "Surface Pro X with ARM CPU: What It Can (and Can't) Run". LaptopMag. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  19. ^ "Microsoft announces support for x64 emulation on Windows 10 on ARM". MSPoweruser. 10 December 2020. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  20. ^ Blog, Windows Insider (21 May 2020). "Announcing Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 19631". Windows Insider Blog. Retrieved 22 January 2021.